Bill Thompson 75
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2010
- Messages
- 1,437
When you continue to call disagreement dishonesty and lies, it becomes apparent that you have no analytical response to make.When I refer to your dishonest and false comments, I mean the comments you've made which are not true. I am giving you the benefit of the doubt in describing those comments as lies. The alternative is you simply don't know what you're writing.
Your ignorance and lack of honesty have been often noted because of their relevance.
There is no relevant time aspect to the chooser . As always, I have said the chooser exists only in his own time-frame. Disagree to that with specifics.No. It follows exactly from my prior statements and from the entire premise of the hypothetical concept under discussion. The analysis has been provided many, many times, not only by me, but by Tricky, not_so_new, tsig, Belz, Dave Rogers, Roboramma, and others in this thread. The reason you're not getting it and mistakenly believe there's a jump, is because you continue to willfully ignore the temporal aspect of the chooser. The knowledge is that of the omniscient being. The time constraint is on the chooser. No jump required. Try to keep up.
There has been one basic argument presented, which is:
Argument: If the OB knows the choice made, then that choice will occur.
My rebuttal consists of an exception to that argument:
Rebuttal: That argument doesn't show that the knowledge of the choice doesn't come from the choice,
The valid conclusion is that the choice forms the OB's knowledge and the choice is not constrained to a single option.
One counter to my rebuttal is something about causality applying to the OB and the chooser in completely different ways.
This is a non sequitur and not relevant to the debate.
Another counter is to give the OB other powers. Again, this is not relevant.
This does not address my exception and therefore is not analytically conclusive.There were no options available to the chooser. When he woke up this morning the choice of spaghetti was already known. The list of choices consisted of a single item.
If you are going to debate omniscience in a theoretical setting (assuming you don't think its actually real) then explain how causality allows knowledge of a future event but disallows the future event from being the basis for the knowledge.As Belz and Tricky have explained, several times and in quite plain language, causality requires a sequence related to time, a before and an after.
It doesn't matter if the OB is atemporal or not. My argument is only concerned with the atemporality of knowledge.The omniscient being is atemporal, regardless of your persistent and dishonest attempts to ignore that aspect when it suits your whim.
This is not relevant. We only need to know about the atemporality of knowledge.And the chooser is not. It is time constrained, again regardless of your persistent and dishonest attempts to ignore that when you think you can get away with it.